I would guess that it is true that upholsters back then, all over the south and not just in Savannah, used Spanish Moss to upholster, not only automobiles but furniture, as well. I have bought antiques that were stuffed with it and it is comfortable. The stuff is abundant, soft and free and very suitable once it is treated to kill the red bugs that live in it. Anyone who grew up in the south and as a kid, played in a 4' high pile of it, knows what I mean by red bugs. Jim Patrick

I would guess that it is true that upholsters back then, all over the south and not just in Savannah, used Spanish Moss to upholster, not only automobiles but furniture, as well. I have bought antiques that were stuffed with it and it is comfortable. The stuff is abundant, soft and free and very suitable once it is treated to kill the red bugs that live in it. Anyone who grew up in the south and as a kid, played in a 4' high pile of it, knows what I mean by red bugs. Jim Patrick

I wouldn't be surprised to find it in a RE-upholster job, but I would have my doubts about a factory Model T. I am not aware of any Model T's having been produced in Savannah, contrary to what one of the local tour companies is apparently saying. But I've been wrong before....

During its peak use for furniture stuffing Spanish Moss was not used right off of the tree. In Louisiana it was gathered in huge quantities and soaked in shallow water (Swamps) for two weeks until the outer layer rotted and sloughed off leaving the wirery inner core which was used as a liner or stuffing. The name "Spanish Moss" is a misnomer. It is actually in the Bromiliad family with it's distant cousin the Pineapple.

As I noted in a recent thread, my wife and I were in Savannah this week.

We were on the tour bus and the lady pointed out the building and said the first Model T was built there. I did a little research and now believe the building was only a dealership.

The lady also talked about the Spanish Moss. It isn't Spanish, it isn't moss. It is a plant that grows in the air without soil. She also talked about the bedbug issue when it was used to stuff mattresses. When I questioned the tour operators about the facts they were reciting, I was encouraged to consult with the local museum and historical society for documentation.

Frank, I think you will find that curled hair is "Horse hair" Pigs have bristles and the hair is short. It would cost a fortune to use, pigs bristle is the prefered hair for top quality paint brushes. They can cost a lot of money if they are pure bristle so much so horse hair is used to cheapen the brushes down.

Tom, if the museum there is anything like some of ours here you will find all kinds of mislabeled items. I think the same people who work there sell trembler coils on ebay as "electric starters" and other wrong descriptions"

I remember as a small kid my grandfather drying spanish moss on a fence for the war effort. He said it was used in airplane seats. If this is true then Ford may have used moss in some of the B-24's they built. Bob

A friend restored an original preteens Auburn "compound" (2cyl.) touring car back in the mid 1960's and it had Spanish moss seat padding. This was the first time either of us had seen moss used for padding.

The car was in the collection of the Los Angeles Museum, so its originality was documented.

I recall this fact, because we joked about collecting moss from my parents ranch in Templeton, CA. to make the restoration accurate.

The LA Museum is not any sort of authority on Spanish Moss or automobiles. I suspect they did not know horsehair when they saw it. The Auburn car was made in Auburn Indiana, where horsehar was plentiful and Spanish Moss non - existent.

Thank you to everyone who responded. It is interesting what you find on the Internet when you look. I found the following quote on a Spanish moss web site. They were talking about the cypress wood that came from the Louisiana Swamps.

"But the original cypress heartwood was truly wonderful stuff. When Henry Ford decided to stuff the seats of his Model-T's with Spanish Moss, he was pulling the moss over the eyes of his Louisiana suppliers. What he was really after was the cypress wood used to build the crates in which the moss was shipped. This wood was perfect for the wooden door panels and dashboards in his Fords, and he got it for nothing by buying the Spanish Moss."

Not to poo poo your response but I saw it myself and immediately recognized it. Spanish Moss is grey green in color and hardly looks like horse hair. I too wondered why a car built in Indiana would have moss padding.

A few years later my Wife and I bought an antique love seat (circa 1895) that had its original upholstery in tact, but recovered several times. Sure enough Spanish Moss padding!

Another fabricated story. Ford used all sorts of scrap wood for floor boards. For some reason people think that adding Henry Ford or Model T to any story adds authenticity despite the complete absence of basis for doing so.

John,

I suspect that a love seat made in 1895 could have been made anywhere using anything. How does that have anything whatsoever to do with a Model T?

Spanish, moss, when alive is light grey in color with a green core, but when it dies and is dried, it turns dark brown and the strands thin out, resembling hair. Any one who has never seen it, might mistake it for hair. Jim Patrick